There was a time when to be a Christian meant danger.
To confess Christ meant the
possibility of exile, ridicule, poverty, imprisonment, or death. The early
Christians entered the Church knowing that they might lose everything for the
sake of the Gospel. The martyrs walked into the arena singing hymns. The ascetics
fled to deserts. The saints wept over their sins. The faithful fasted, prayed,
struggled, repented, and endured.
Today, however, in much of the
modern world, Christianity has become something else entirely.
It has become comfortable.
And therein lies the tragedy.
Modern Christianity often asks
not, “How can I crucify my passions?” but rather, “How
can I remain comfortable while still calling myself a Christian?” The
spirit of sacrifice has been replaced by the spirit of convenience. The narrow
path spoken of by Christ has been widened to accommodate the passions of the
age.
There are still challenges,
especially if we choose to be true Christians. Being mocked, ostracized,
shunned, and having our lives made somewhat inconvenient. But we try to avoid
that too!
Our Lord did not say: “If anyone
wishes to follow Me, let him remain comfortable.”
He said: “If any man will come
after Me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow Me.”— Matthew
16:24
Yet self-denial has become almost
foreign to contemporary religious culture. Fasting is considered extreme.
Modesty is considered outdated. Vigilance over the soul is considered
unhealthy. Repentance is replaced with self-affirmation. Spiritual warfare is
dismissed as symbolism. The fear of God is exchanged for therapeutic
sentimentality.
Many now desire a Christianity
without asceticism, without tears, without obedience, without struggle, without
sacrifice, and ultimately — without the Cross.
But Christianity without the
Cross is not Christianity at all.
The holy Fathers never presented
the spiritual life as comfortable. They described it as warfare. They spoke of
watchfulness, tears, repentance, fasting, prostrations, silence, humility, and
endurance. They understood that fallen man does not drift naturally toward
holiness. He drifts toward carefreeness.
And this spiritual nonchalance is
perhaps the greatest danger of comfortable Christianity.
A persecuted Christian may fall
through weakness. But a comfortable Christian often falls through
forgetfulness. His soul becomes lulled into spiritual complacency. He no longer
struggles against sin because sin no longer disturbs him. The conscience becomes
anesthetized little by little, not through dramatic apostasy, but through
gradual accommodation to the world.
The devil does not always destroy Christians through persecution.
Often, he destroys them through
comfort.
A “Christianity” that asks
nothing of us eventually changes nothing within us.
This is why the modern world
tolerates so much “religion”. A “Christianity” stripped of asceticism and truth
poses no threat to the kingdom of darkness. But genuine Orthodox Christianity —
the Christianity of the saints — remains deeply offensive to the spirit of the
age because it calls man to repentance and transformation.
The saints did not seek comfort.
They sought Christ.
And because they sought Christ,
they willingly accepted discomfort.
The martyrs endured torture
rather than burn a pinch of incense to idols. The monastics embraced poverty
and fasting to wage war against the passions. Holy hierarchs endured
exile rather than compromise the Faith. Countless righteous Christians
chose to suffer with Christ rather than to seek comfort without Him.
Compare this with the modern
mentality which often measures spiritual life according to emotional
satisfaction, convenience, or personal preference. Churches are abandoned if
sermons are “too strict.” Fasting rules are ignored because they interfere with
lifestyle. Ancient Christian morality is modified so that modern society will
not be offended.
But truth does not change because
society changes.
Christ did not promise us social
acceptance. In fact, He promised the opposite:
“Ye shall be hated by all men for
My Name’s sake.”— Matthew 10:22
The tragedy of comfortable
Christianity is not merely that it weakens the individual believer. It also
weakens the witness of the Church before the world. When Christians become
indistinguishable from the secular culture around them, the light grows dim.
Salt that loses its savor cannot preserve anything.
The world does not need a
Church that imitates its confusion.
It needs a Church that calls it
to repentance.
It needs Christians who still
believe that holiness is possible.
It needs men and women who are
willing to struggle for purity, truth, humility, and salvation.
The True Orthodox Christian life is not a life of despair, but neither is it a
life of ease. It is a life of joy born through struggle. The Resurrection comes
only after Golgotha. The crown comes only after the Cross.
Comfortable “Christianity”
teaches people to avoid suffering at all costs.
Orthodoxy teaches us how to
suffer with meaning.
This is why the saints possessed
an inner peace unknown to the modern world. Their peace did not come from
comfort, wealth, entertainment, or self-indulgence. It came from reconciliation
with God through repentance and spiritual struggle.
One tear of genuine repentance is
most certainly worth more than years of superficial religiosity.
The great danger today is not only atheism.
It is “Christianity” emptied of
repentance.
A “Christianity” that blesses the
passions rather than crucifies them.
A “Christianity” that seeks
applause from the world instead of salvation from Christ.
A “Christianity” that wears the
name of Christ while fearing the very life to which Christ calls us.
May we not become Christians only
in appearance!
May we not exchange the narrow
path for the broad road of comfort!
And may we remember that the
Faith handed down by the martyrs, confessors, ascetics, and holy Fathers was
never meant to make us comfortable in this fallen world!
It was meant to make us saints.
Source: https://trueorthodox.eu/the-tragedy-of-comfortable-christianity/
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